Acceptance Rate
19%
Avg SAT
1,416
Avg ACT
32
Enrollment
12,570
Sport
Baseball
Gender
Men's
Division
NCAA Division 1
Location
Miami, FL
Now Evaluating
J.D. Arteaga
Head Coach
Arteaga's 14th year on the Hurricanes' coaching staff, where he has served since 2003. Arteaga, a standout southpaw during his own four years in the Miami rotation, helped guide the Hurricanes to their second straight College World Series berth and 25th in program history in 2016. Under his direction as pitching coach in 2016, closer Bryan Garcia set the all-time saves record at Miami and became the first Hurricane to win NCBWA Stopper of the Year honors as the nation's top relief pitcher. Garcia (sixth round, Detroit) and lefthander Danny Garcia (14th round, Seattle) were both selected in the 2016 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft. At least one Hurricane pitcher has been selected in the MLB Draft each year since 2004. Arteaga recently coached lefthander Chris Diaz to ACC Co-Pitcher of the Year honors in 2014. Under his guidance, all four of Miami's starting pitchers in 2014 - Diaz, Bryan Radziewski, Javi Salas and Andy Suarez - were all drafted in the top 10 rounds of the 2014 MLB Draft. Suarez, who elected to return to school and served as the staff ace on a 2015 team that qualified for the College World Series, was drafted in the second round (No. 67) overall by San Francisco in the 2015 MLB Draft. Arteaga helped lead Radziewski to Rawlings All-America honors in 2013 - the first for a UM player since 2010. Two of the team's weekend starters, Radziewski and Diaz, ranked among the top three in ERA for all Atlantic Coast Conference pitchers in 2013. Arteaga has tutored three recent first-round draft picks in the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft - Carlos Gutierrez in 2008, Chris Perez in 2006 and Cesar Carrillo in 2005. Gutierrez was the 27th overall pick in the 2008 draft by the Minnesota Twins after earning second team All-ACC honors. Perez, who came to Miami as a starting prospect, was aided by Arteaga in his transition to becoming one of the country's top closers. Carrillo started his career 24-0 as a Hurricane. In addition to his work in converting Perez from a starter to a closer, he helped Kyle Bellamy in his transition from a traditional over-the-top throwing motion to a sidewinding delivery. The move had great rewards, as Bellamy recorded 16 saves and finished the 2009 season with a 0.97 ERA en route to numerous first team All-America honors. Arteaga's 2008 staff boasted National Freshman Pitcher of the Year and Roger Clemens Award finalist Chris Hernandez, who finished 11-0 with a 2.72 ERA while opponents hit just .223 against him. All three starters in 2008, Hernandez, sophomore lefty Eric Erickson and senior right-hander Enrique Garcia combined to go 27-4 while the entire pitching staff combined for the fewest walks (187) in school history and eighth-most strikeouts (554). His 2006 staff, composed almost entirely of first-time starters, recorded five shutouts, the most by a UM staff since the 1998 season. Miami also recorded the team's first postseason shutout on the road since 1976 with a 7-0 win against Ole Miss in the 2006 Oxford Super Regional. Four pitchers from Arteaga's 2005 pitching staff signed pro contracts following the season, including the school's first pitcher drafted in the first round since the 1991 season, Carrillo. Arteaga also played a major role in Carrillo's career development and run at the NCAA record books. Carrillo, who was the 18th overall pick in the 2005 draft, ended with a career record of 25-3, was an All-American and a finalist for the Dick Howser Trophy and the Roger Clemens Award as college baseball's best pitcher in 2005. The 2004 Miami pitching staff produced the best team ERA in (3.73) since the 2000 season (3.72). Morris named Arteaga the Hurricanes' next pitching coach on March 4, 2003, nine games deep into the season. Arteaga's style and approach to pitching was vital in J.D. Cockroft's development into the ace on Miami's 2003 club. Cockroft, a crafty left-hander, went 11-3 with a 2.72 ERA in a team-high 119 innings, including three complete games and one shutout. Arteaga played for the Hurricanes from 1994-1997, helping UM reach the College World Series four straight seasons. He left Miami as the program's all-time wins leader with 43 and the all-time starts leader with 72. Arteaga ranks second for innings pitched in a career with 458.1. He is also fifth on the all-time strikeouts chart with 343 career Ks. Arteaga threw three complete games at UM and struck out career-high 11 batters on two different occasions (FSU, 4/16/95 and George Washington, 2/16/96). He posted an 11-3 record as a sophomore in 1995 and a 9-1 mark as a freshman. Miami retired Arteaga's No. 33 on Feb. 5, 2003, prior to the season opener with Florida International. A 26th round draft choice by the New York Mets, Arteaga spent five seasons in the Mets' and Houston Astros' organizations. He had signed on with the Texas Rangers' organization in the spring of 2003, prior to accepting his post with the Hurricanes. He spent his last professional season with the Astros' Triple-A franchise New Orleans Zephyrs, compiling a 9-10 record with a 4.29 ERA in 15 starts and 42 appearances. The left-hander came to the Hurricanes out of Westminster Christian in Miami. He won a career best 12 games as a junior in 1996 (12-1) and came back to go 11-4 as a senior. Arteaga earned his bachelor's degree in criminal justice from the University of Miami in 2002. He is married to the former Ysha Schettini and the couple has two children, a son, A.J. and a daughter, Ariana.
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Gino DiMare
Head Coach
DiMare's 17th year as a member of the Hurricanes baseball staff. DiMare rejoined the University of Miami baseball program after three years away from the program in 2011. Prior to his exit in 2008, DiMare served as the Canes recruiting coordinator and hitting coach over his final nine seasons. He held the title of assistant head coach during the 2008 season - a year the Canes won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship before advancing to the College World Series. The Hurricanes qualified for their second straight College World Series berth and 25th in program history in 2016. Under DiMare's guidance as hitting coach, five field players (Zack Collins - first round, Willie Abreu - sixth round, Brandon Lopez - 10th round, Jacob Heyward - 18th round, Johnny Ruiz - 28th round) were selected in the 2016 MLB First-Year Player Draft. Collins was named a first-team All-American by several publications, and became Miami's first first-round draft pick since Yasmani Grandal in 2010 when he was selected by the Chicago White Sox with the No. 10 overall pick. In 2015, DiMare guided the Hurricanes to the No. 1 national ranking in offense. Miami scored 547 runs over the season, which ranked first nationally at an average of 8.16 runs per game. Miami's offense, which ranked No. 7 nationally in batting average (.307) and No. 2 in on-base percentage (.417), led the way to the team's 24th College World Series appearance in program history and second straight ACC Coastal Division title. DiMare's impact on the program was felt immediately upon his return in 2012, as the first recruiting class under his watch was ranked among the top 10 by two national publications. Miami's incoming 2012 freshman class was ranked No. 10 by Baseball America, its first top-10 ranking from BA since 2006, and No. 9 by Collegiate Baseball. One of those newcomers, third baseman David Thompson, earned Freshman All-America honors from Perfect Game following the conclusion of the 2013 season. Previously, DiMare helped recruit and coach players such as Yonder Alonso, Ryan Braun, Jon Jay, Gaby Sanchez, Danny Valencia and Jemile Weeks - all of whom have reached the big leagues in recent years. DiMare's accomplishments on the recruiting scene during his nine years in the capacity of recruiting coordinator are as impressive as the Hurricanes' annual postseason results. His 2001 class was rated among the top five nationally and his 2003 class was ranked among the top 15 nationally. UM's 2008 recruiting class, which was targeted primarily by DiMare, was ranked second by Collegiate Baseball and fifth by Baseball America prior to the 2007 season. That includes Braun, the 2005 ACC Player of the Year and Cesar Carrillo, the ACC's Pitcher of the Year that same season. Braun and Carrillo were also Miami's two first-round draft picks in 2005. DiMare has also kept Florida's top talent home, including 2006 first-round pick Chris Perez (Holmes Beach) and second-round pick Jay (Miami). DiMare's offensive teams also proved to be some of the best in the history of the Hurricanes program. UMiami's offense ranked among the top 10 in school history in eight of DiMare's nine seasons as the club's hitting instructor. The 2005 team hit .321, the seventh-best team batting average in school history and the 2004 squad finished the season with a .330 batting average, which ranks fourth in school history. UM's .310 average in 2006 was only bested by five teams that were not under the guidance of DiMare, dating back 62 years. The 1999 Hurricanes posted the third-best batting average in school history with a .333 mark, while the 2000 team finished with a .323 batting average that ranks sixth all time. Miami batted .315 in 2003 and .314 in 2002 (10th). The 2008 team that advanced to the College World Series and spent much of the season atop the national collegiate baseball polls finished the year hitting at a school eighth-best .320 average, while also ranking tied for second in home runs (106), fourth in slugging percentage (.541), eighth in total bases (1,202) and RBI (517), tied for ninth in doubles (135) and 10th in hits (711). DiMare has long been associated with the Miami baseball program. First, he was a fan as a kid growing up in South Florida. Then, DiMare was a player for the Hurricanes following a stellar career at Miami Westminster Christian. He was a standout outfielder for the Canes from 1989-92, with a career batting average of .290. He currently ranks among UM's leaders in career games played (243), career stolen bases (93) and total sacrifices (36). In 1991, DiMare led the Hurricanes with a .353 batting average. Following his career in Coral Gables, he was signed as a free agent by the Boston Red Sox. He played the 1992-93 seasons in the Red Sox minor league system in Winter Haven and Ft. Lauderdale. Upon returning to Miami, DiMare spent the 1996 season as an assistant coach at Westminster - the 1996 High School National Champions. DiMare then returned to UM in 1997 and was a volunteer coach for three seasons, in charge of outfielders and base running. DiMare currently resides in Miami with his wife Denise and four daughters: Nicolette, Gianna, Giselle and Gina.
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Norberto Lopez
Assistant Coach
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Brandon Brewer
Coach
Morris' Hurricanes are continually the class of collegiate baseball, having won national titles in 1999 and 2001 and the ACC Baseball Regular Season Championship in 2008, 2014 and 2016. In his 23-season tenure at Miami, no program has qualified for the College World Series as much as Morris and his Hurricanes. Miami, which has qualified for the NCAA Tournament a college baseball-record 44 consecutive years, has made it to Omaha in 13 of Morris' 23 seasons in Coral Gables - including most recently in 2016, when Miami was awarded the No. 3 national seed for the NCAA postseason. Morris set an NCAA record for guiding a program to the CWS in each of his first six years at UM. In addition, Morris has won 17 of 23 NCAA Regional appearances at UM, including a record 13 straight to start his tenure in Coral Gables. His teams have qualified for NCAA Regionals for the last 32 years - all 23 at Miami and his final nine at Georgia Tech. A three-time national coach of the year and 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Coach of the Year, Morris has directed the Hurricanes to a 1,031-419-3 (.710) mark since arriving in 1994. Including his 12 seasons at Georgia Tech (1982-93), Morris has forged a 1,535-663-4 (.697) Division I record in 35 years as a head coach. Overall, Morris has been the head coach at the collegiate level for 39 seasons, spending the first four at DeKalb (Ga.) C.C. from 1976-79, and has recorded a 1,666-704-4 (.702) mark. In addition to carrying on Miami's great baseball reputation in the last 23 years, Morris personally led the charge in the construction of Alex Rodriguez Park, and logged hundreds of hours raising funds for the stadium's renovation prior to its reopening in 2009. Morris reached two coaching milestones in 2016, as he led the program to its 25th College World Series appearance in history, its third straight ACC Coastal Division title and the program's second ACC Regular Season Championship in a three-year span. The Hurricanes posted a 50-win season (50-14) for the second straight year, marking the first such instance for Miami since 1998 / 1999. Morris became just the sixth coach in the history of Division I baseball to reach the 1,500-win plateau when Miami topped Louisville 8-4 in dramatic fashion on March 18, 2016. A walk-off grand slam from Willie Abreu gave Morris his 1,500th. Eight days later, Miami topped Clemson 5-4 in 11 innings - also in walk-off fashion - to send Morris to his 1,000th win at the helm of the Hurricanes. Under his direction, the Hurricanes set the program record for fielding percentage with a sparkling .983 mark in 2016, a figure that ranked best nationwide. Seven Hurricanes were selected in the first round in 2016 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft, including the program's first first-round selection since 2010 in catcher Zack Collins (No. 10, Chicago White Sox). Morris also helped guide two Hurricanes to a pair of major awards: Collins became the first Hurricane to win the Johnny Bench Award as the nation's top collegiate catcher in 2016, while Bryan Garcia set the program saves record and became the first Hurricane to win the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Award as the nation's top relief pitcher. In 2015, Morris led the Hurricanes to their second straight ACC Coastal Division title, the 24th College World Series appearance in program history, and reached the 50-win mark for the 12th time. Morris entered 2015 among the winningest active coaches in Division I baseball with 1,435 wins. He wasted little time in moving up the record books, moving into sole possession of eighth place in all-time wins (1,439) on Feb. 15 with a 25-4 win over Rutgers and then seventh place with a 9-5 win over Louisville on March 7 (1,445). Miami captured the 2014 ACC Regular Season Championship under his watch, recording 24 wins in conference play for the first time in program history. The conference win total set a new record for the program and tied the ACC's all-time single-season win total at the time. Morris reached two coaching milestones in the first half of the 2014 season. He became just the eighth Division I coach to reach 1,400 wins in a 5-2 win over Boston College on March 8, and won his 900th game at Miami in a 7-1 upset of No. 3 Virginia on March 22. The Hurricanes, who have never missed the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship since joining the ACC in 2004, qualified for their 10th straight conference tournament under Morris and earned a Regional host spot for their 42nd consecutive postseason trip. On March 15, 2013, Morris won his 1,500th game as a head coach in signature fashion - upsetting No. 1 North Carolina on the road at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Morris has reached a number of other coaching milestones in his time in Coral Gables. His 1,000th Division-I game on April 4, 2004, at his old stomping grounds at Georgia Tech. He also achieved another milestone during the 2004 season, winning his 500th game at the helm of the Miami program. Morris' 500th win came just a few weeks following his 1,000th overall win as a Division-I head coach by beating Florida State 7-3 on April 17. His 600th win at Miami fittingly came in UM's 2006 Regional Opener against San Francisco on June 2, an 11-2 win that began the greatest run to the postseason in Miami's history. He is the second Hurricanes' head coach to win 500 games at Miami, joining Ron Fraser, who won 1,271 games from 1963-1992 in Coral Gables. The 2008 season saw the Hurricanes reach their 11th CWS and reach the 50-win plateau for the seventh time under Morris. The team finished with an overall record of 53-11 (.828), the highest winning percentage for a Miami team in 16 seasons. The Hurricanes, after going 43-8 overall and 23-5 in ACC play during the regular season, went on to win their first ACC title at the 2008 ACC Championship in Jacksonville. Miami would go on to host and win both the Coral Gables Regional (vs. Bethune-Cookman, Mississippi and Missouri) and the Coral Gables Super Regional (vs. Arizona) on its path to Omaha. Morris earned ACC Coach of the Year honors for his leadership in 2008 while eight Hurricanes were named to the All-ACC team, including left-hander Chris Hernandez, who was named ACC Freshman of the Year. For the first time in school history, three Hurricanes were selected in the first round of the Major League Baseball Draft in 2008. Junior first baseman Yonder Alonso (7th overall to the Cincinnati Reds), junior second baseman Jemile Weeks (12th overall to the Oakland Athletics) and junior right-handed pitcher Carlos Gutierrez (27th overall to the Minnesota Twins) were the first three of eight total `Canes taken in the 2008 draft. Affectionately known as "3" by those surrounding the UM program, Morris and the Hurricanes claimed the 2001 National Championship with a 12-1 victory over Stanford in the College World Series finale at Rosenblatt Stadium. The 11-run margin of victory over the Cardinal tied a 45-year-old CWS record for a championship game, while the Hurricanes' 12.3 runs per game set a new CWS mark. Miami had also defeated Tennessee twice, 21-13 and 12-6, and Southern California, 4-3, to advance to the title game. Miami finished the 2001 season riding a NCAA-high 17-game win streak, including a nine-game sweep during the postseason. The Hurricanes claimed the Coral Gables Regional championship with wins over Bucknell, Florida and Stetson, followed by a two-game sweep of Clemson in the Coral Gables Super Regional. The Hurricanes' 53-12 overall record in 2001 marked the most in wins (53) and winning percentage (.815) under Morris. Miami also led the nation in stolen bases (228) and relief pitcher appearances (223). Morris also saw school record 11 players were drafted and two more signed to free agent contracts off his 2001 squad. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and the American Baseball Coaches Association each honored Morris with its National Coach of the Year honors following his 2001 title to give him five such honors for his career. He additionally won top honors from Collegiate Baseball and the ABCA after the Hurricanes defeated Florida State, 6-5, for the 1999 National Championship. Morris' first National Coach of the Year honor came in his first season at Miami in 1994. Morris has tasted success everywhere he has been, and he knew when he came to the University of Miami in the fall of 1993 that there was no better place for a winner to be than at the helm of the Hurricane program. The Georgia Tech program he built in his 12 years in Atlanta, and which he guided to four ACC Championships (1985, 1986, 1987, 1988) in his nine seasons, took on a lot of the qualities that former UM coach Ron Fraser had been so successful with at Miami. Morris has kept both the prestige and winning at Mark Light Field, and has the old-time fans remembering the "good old days," when it seemed like almost every season under Fraser would end in Omaha. "Jim came to me wanting to learn. He not only wanted to know why we did the things we do at Miami, but how to do it in a first-class manner," recalled Fraser. "In my opinion, Coach Fraser is the most influential head coach in the history of college baseball," commented Morris. "What he has done for this sport and at Miami is legendary. Coach Fraser has made an impact on so many young coaches throughout the years, including myself. He helped me tremendously before I came to Miami and still does to this day." Family Man Coach Morris and his wife Nhan live in Miami with their four-year-old son, James W. Morris IV (Will). The Perfect Choice Athletic Director Paul Dee officially appointed Morris Miami's eighth baseball coach on November 4, 1993. Morris graciously accepted and opened a new chapter in his storied coaching career. "This is a great honor, I'm very excited," said Morris. "The University of Miami has a baseball program I've always respected. It is a program that I've always admired." "I'm extremely pleased that we've been able to attract to the University of Miami one of the most outstanding collegiate baseball coaches in the country," explained Dee. "Jim's experience in a major metropolitan market with several professional teams was an important aspect of his background outside his outstanding coaching ability. "Another important aspect of Jim's background is that he was able to have successful teams at a highly competitive academic institution." Leaving Georgia Tech, which was the preseason No. 1 team in 1994, had to be tough, but the usually candid Morris put it in perspective. "I'm going from the No. 1 team in the country, to the No. 1 program in the country," he said. Welcome to Miami Morris' admiration for the Hurricanes' baseball program began when he first came in contact with it as a 22-year old shortstop. He asked Coach Fraser's permission to take ground balls on the new Tartan Turf that would later become a part of Mark Light Field. His meeting with Fraser and his chance to practice at the Light left an impact on Morris that he would not forget as he began his professional career. Morris ended up playing two seasons in the Boston Red Sox minor league system. Though his playing days came to an early end, he quickly saw that he had a future in coaching. An assistant coaching stint at Appalachian State in 1975 set the groundwork. In 1976, he then accepted the challenge of building, from scratch, a baseball program at Atlanta's DeKalb Community College's South campus. Building the Best At DeKalb, Morris started with no players and no field. After settling those "minor" issues, he quickly made a name for himself. His Eagles were nationally ranked three times in four years and advanced to the 1977 Junior College World Series. DeKalb finished second in just his second season. Morris added two more winning years at DeKalb before moving on to become an assistant coach at Florida State University. Carrying the Tradition On May 23, 1981, Morris received his second dose of Mark Light schooling. On that night, an overflow crowd packed The Light for a game vs. Florida State. Fraser, ever the showman, wasn't about to turn away a patron. "Coach Fraser asked us if it was all right to rope off sections of foul territory down the lines. We said sure, and they were packed 10-feet deep in there. It was most incredible thing I've ever seen in college baseball. Fraser also asked us if we'd consider roping off the warning track, but we balked at that," added Morris. "I remember how exciting that game was and it was the first game I saw at the University of Miami. It was an outstanding day for me." Miami defeated the Seminoles, 14-6, that night in front of 7,268 fans. It was a big night for the Hurricanes and one that Jim Morris would never forget. A year later, Morris would accept a huge challenge in accepting the head coaching job at Georgia Tech. It was a reclamation project as the Yellow Jackets were on the backside of four straight losing seasons and were 4-23 in their first two seasons in the Atlantic Coast Conference. At Georgia Tech, Morris was the all-time leader in coaching victories, in any of the school's varsity sports, as he had 12 straight winning seasons, nine straight NCAA regional berths, four straight Atlantic Coast Conference titles (1985-88) and a school-record 51 wins in 1987. In 1985 Morris was asked to be director of marketing and ticket sales by Dr. Homer Rice at Georgia Tech. Morris had put the Yellow Jackets' program on the map in baseball, and in the process raised money for lights and a new stadium. After one year, Morris decided it was impossible to do both and chose to focus his efforts completely on baseball even though he had great love for marketing and fundraising. Major League Guidance Over 150 professional baseball players have played under Morris during their college careers at Miami, Georgia Tech and DeKalb. Among the players Morris coached at Miami that went on to play in the Major Leagues were Ryan Braun (Milwaukee), Pat Burrell (Tampa Bay), Alex Cora (New York Mets), Bobby Hill (San Diego), Aubrey Huff (Detroit), Chris Perez (Cleveland), Cesar Carrillo (San Diego), Brian Barton (St. Louis), Gaby Sanchez (Florida), Charlton Jimerson (Houston), Jay Tessmer (New York Yankees), and Danny Graves (Cincinnati) and Jason Michaels (Houston). Several more Hurricanes during the Morris tenure are right on the cusp of making the show, including Mike Rodriguez (Houston), David Gil (Cincinnati) and Jon Jay (St. Louis). Standout players under Morris from his days at Georgia Tech were Nomar Garciaparra (Los Angeles Dodgers), Jay Payton (Oakland A's) and Jason Varitek (Boston Red Sox). Morris has also enjoyed success on the International scene. From 1989-90, Morris served as head coach of the USA Baseball team that won a Silver Medal in the 1989 Presidential Cup (Taiwan), Bronze Medal at the Goodwill Games and the 1990 International Baseball Association (IBA) World All-Star Game in Atlanta. At the Goodwill Games, his USA squad won two of three games against Cuba, marking the first time in history a senior-level team won a series with Cuba. In 1987, Morris served as pitching coach under Ron Fraser at the Pan American Games (Silver Medal). National Coach of the Year Honors 2001 & 1999 Collegiate Baseball Newspaper 2001 & 1999 American Baseball Coaches' Association 1994 Baseball America Conference Coach of the Year Honors 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference It doesn't matter if his roster is full of rookies or veterans, University of Miami head coach Jim Morris continues to produce some of college baseball's most consistent and dominant teams entering his 24th season in Coral Gables. With a talented staff around him, Morris' Hurricanes are continually the class of collegiate baseball, having won national titles in 1999 and 2001 and the ACC Baseball Regular Season Championship in 2008, 2014 and 2016. In his 23-season tenure at Miami, no program has qualified for the College World Series as much as Morris and his Hurricanes. Miami, which has qualified for the NCAA Tournament a college baseball-record 44 consecutive years, has made it to Omaha in 13 of Morris' 23 seasons in Coral Gables - including most recently in 2016, when Miami was awarded the No. 3 national seed for the NCAA postseason. Morris set an NCAA record for guiding a program to the CWS in each of his first six years at UM. In addition, Morris has won 17 of 23 NCAA Regional appearances at UM, including a record 13 straight to start his tenure in Coral Gables. His teams have qualified for NCAA Regionals for the last 32 years - all 23 at Miami and his final nine at Georgia Tech. A three-time national coach of the year and 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Coach of the Year, Morris has directed the Hurricanes to a 1,031-419-3 (.710) mark since arriving in 1994. Including his 12 seasons at Georgia Tech (1982-93), Morris has forged a 1,535-663-4 (.697) Division I record in 35 years as a head coach. Overall, Morris has been the head coach at the collegiate level for 39 seasons, spending the first four at DeKalb (Ga.) C.C. from 1976-79, and has recorded a 1,666-704-4 (.702) mark. In addition to carrying on Miami's great baseball reputation in the last 23 years, Morris personally led the charge in the construction of Alex Rodriguez Park, and logged hundreds of hours raising funds for the stadium's renovation prior to its reopening in 2009. Morris reached two coaching milestones in 2016, as he led the program to its 25th College World Series appearance in history, its third straight ACC Coastal Division title and the program's second ACC Regular Season Championship in a three-year span. The Hurricanes posted a 50-win season (50-14) for the second straight year, marking the first such instance for Miami since 1998 / 1999. Morris became just the sixth coach in the history of Division I baseball to reach the 1,500-win plateau when Miami topped Louisville 8-4 in dramatic fashion on March 18, 2016. A walk-off grand slam from Willie Abreu gave Morris his 1,500th. Eight days later, Miami topped Clemson 5-4 in 11 innings - also in walk-off fashion - to send Morris to his 1,000th win at the helm of the Hurricanes. Under his direction, the Hurricanes set the program record for fielding percentage with a sparkling .983 mark in 2016, a figure that ranked best nationwide. Seven Hurricanes were selected in the first round in 2016 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft, including the program's first first-round selection since 2010 in catcher Zack Collins (No. 10, Chicago White Sox). Morris also helped guide two Hurricanes to a pair of major awards: Collins became the first Hurricane to win the Johnny Bench Award as the nation's top collegiate catcher in 2016, while Bryan Garcia set the program saves record and became the first Hurricane to win the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Award as the nation's top relief pitcher. In 2015, Morris led the Hurricanes to their second straight ACC Coastal Division title, the 24th College World Series appearance in program history, and reached the 50-win mark for the 12th time. Morris entered 2015 among the winningest active coaches in Division I baseball with 1,435 wins. He wasted little time in moving up the record books, moving into sole possession of eighth place in all-time wins (1,439) on Feb. 15 with a 25-4 win over Rutgers and then seventh place with a 9-5 win over Louisville on March 7 (1,445). Miami captured the 2014 ACC Regular Season Championship under his watch, recording 24 wins in conference play for the first time in program history. The conference win total set a new record for the program and tied the ACC's all-time single-season win total at the time. Morris reached two coaching milestones in the first half of the 2014 season. He became just the eighth Division I coach to reach 1,400 wins in a 5-2 win over Boston College on March 8, and won his 900th game at Miami in a 7-1 upset of No. 3 Virginia on March 22. The Hurricanes, who have never missed the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship since joining the ACC in 2004, qualified for their 10th straight conference tournament under Morris and earned a Regional host spot for their 42nd consecutive postseason trip. On March 15, 2013, Morris won his 1,500th game as a head coach in signature fashion - upsetting No. 1 North Carolina on the road at Boshamer Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Morris has reached a number of other coaching milestones in his time in Coral Gables. His 1,000th Division-I game on April 4, 2004, at his old stomping grounds at Georgia Tech. He also achieved another milestone during the 2004 season, winning his 500th game at the helm of the Miami program. Morris' 500th win came just a few weeks following his 1,000th overall win as a Division-I head coach by beating Florida State 7-3 on April 17. His 600th win at Miami fittingly came in UM's 2006 Regional Opener against San Francisco on June 2, an 11-2 win that began the greatest run to the postseason in Miami's history. He is the second Hurricanes' head coach to win 500 games at Miami, joining Ron Fraser, who won 1,271 games from 1963-1992 in Coral Gables. The 2008 season saw the Hurricanes reach their 11th CWS and reach the 50-win plateau for the seventh time under Morris. The team finished with an overall record of 53-11 (.828), the highest winning percentage for a Miami team in 16 seasons. The Hurricanes, after going 43-8 overall and 23-5 in ACC play during the regular season, went on to win their first ACC title at the 2008 ACC Championship in Jacksonville. Miami would go on to host and win both the Coral Gables Regional (vs. Bethune-Cookman, Mississippi and Missouri) and the Coral Gables Super Regional (vs. Arizona) on its path to Omaha. Morris earned ACC Coach of the Year honors for his leadership in 2008 while eight Hurricanes were named to the All-ACC team, including left-hander Chris Hernandez, who was named ACC Freshman of the Year. For the first time in school history, three Hurricanes were selected in the first round of the Major League Baseball Draft in 2008. Junior first baseman Yonder Alonso (7th overall to the Cincinnati Reds), junior second baseman Jemile Weeks (12th overall to the Oakland Athletics) and junior right-handed pitcher Carlos Gutierrez (27th overall to the Minnesota Twins) were the first three of eight total `Canes taken in the 2008 draft. Affectionately known as "3" by those surrounding the UM program, Morris and the Hurricanes claimed the 2001 National Championship with a 12-1 victory over Stanford in the College World Series finale at Rosenblatt Stadium. The 11-run margin of victory over the Cardinal tied a 45-year-old CWS record for a championship game, while the Hurricanes' 12.3 runs per game set a new CWS mark. Miami had also defeated Tennessee twice, 21-13 and 12-6, and Southern California, 4-3, to advance to the title game. Miami finished the 2001 season riding a NCAA-high 17-game win streak, including a nine-game sweep during the postseason. The Hurricanes claimed the Coral Gables Regional championship with wins over Bucknell, Florida and Stetson, followed by a two-game sweep of Clemson in the Coral Gables Super Regional. The Hurricanes' 53-12 overall record in 2001 marked the most in wins (53) and winning percentage (.815) under Morris. Miami also led the nation in stolen bases (228) and relief pitcher appearances (223). Morris also saw school record 11 players were drafted and two more signed to free agent contracts off his 2001 squad. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper and the American Baseball Coaches Association each honored Morris with its National Coach of the Year honors following his 2001 title to give him five such honors for his career. He additionally won top honors from Collegiate Baseball and the ABCA after the Hurricanes defeated Florida State, 6-5, for the 1999 National Championship. Morris' first National Coach of the Year honor came in his first season at Miami in 1994. Morris has tasted success everywhere he has been, and he knew when he came to the University of Miami in the fall of 1993 that there was no better place for a winner to be than at the helm of the Hurricane program. The Georgia Tech program he built in his 12 years in Atlanta, and which he guided to four ACC Championships (1985, 1986, 1987, 1988) in his nine seasons, took on a lot of the qualities that former UM coach Ron Fraser had been so successful with at Miami. Morris has kept both the prestige and winning at Mark Light Field, and has the old-time fans remembering the "good old days," when it seemed like almost every season under Fraser would end in Omaha. "Jim came to me wanting to learn. He not only wanted to know why we did the things we do at Miami, but how to do it in a first-class manner," recalled Fraser. "In my opinion, Coach Fraser is the most influential head coach in the history of college baseball," commented Morris. "What he has done for this sport and at Miami is legendary. Coach Fraser has made an impact on so many young coaches throughout the years, including myself. He helped me tremendously before I came to Miami and still does to this day." Family Man Coach Morris and his wife Nhan live in Miami with their four-year-old son, James W. Morris IV (Will). The Perfect Choice Athletic Director Paul Dee officially appointed Morris Miami's eighth baseball coach on November 4, 1993. Morris graciously accepted and opened a new chapter in his storied coaching career. "This is a great honor, I'm very excited," said Morris. "The University of Miami has a baseball program I've always respected. It is a program that I've always admired." "I'm extremely pleased that we've been able to attract to the University of Miami one of the most outstanding collegiate baseball coaches in the country," explained Dee. "Jim's experience in a major metropolitan market with several professional teams was an important aspect of his background outside his outstanding coaching ability. "Another important aspect of Jim's background is that he was able to have successful teams at a highly competitive academic institution." Leaving Georgia Tech, which was the preseason No. 1 team in 1994, had to be tough, but the usually candid Morris put it in perspective. "I'm going from the No. 1 team in the country, to the No. 1 program in the country," he said. Welcome to Miami Morris' admiration for the Hurricanes' baseball program began when he first came in contact with it as a 22-year old shortstop. He asked Coach Fraser's permission to take ground balls on the new Tartan Turf that would later become a part of Mark Light Field. His meeting with Fraser and his chance to practice at the Light left an impact on Morris that he would not forget as he began his professional career. Morris ended up playing two seasons in the Boston Red Sox minor league system. Though his playing days came to an early end, he quickly saw that he had a future in coaching. An assistant coaching stint at Appalachian State in 1975 set the groundwork. In 1976, he then accepted the challenge of building, from scratch, a baseball program at Atlanta's DeKalb Community College's South campus. Building the Best At DeKalb, Morris started with no players and no field. After settling those "minor" issues, he quickly made a name for himself. His Eagles were nationally ranked three times in four years and advanced to the 1977 Junior College World Series. DeKalb finished second in just his second season. Morris added two more winning years at DeKalb before moving on to become an assistant coach at Florida State University. Carrying the Tradition On May 23, 1981, Morris received his second dose of Mark Light schooling. On that night, an overflow crowd packed The Light for a game vs. Florida State. Fraser, ever the showman, wasn't about to turn away a patron. "Coach Fraser asked us if it was all right to rope off sections of foul territory down the lines. We said sure, and they were packed 10-feet deep in there. It was most incredible thing I've ever seen in college baseball. Fraser also asked us if we'd consider roping off the warning track, but we balked at that," added Morris. "I remember how exciting that game was and it was the first game I saw at the University of Miami. It was an outstanding day for me." Miami defeated the Seminoles, 14-6, that night in front of 7,268 fans. It was a big night for the Hurricanes and one that Jim Morris would never forget. A year later, Morris would accept a huge challenge in accepting the head coaching job at Georgia Tech. It was a reclamation project as the Yellow Jackets were on the backside of four straight losing seasons and were 4-23 in their first two seasons in the Atlantic Coast Conference. At Georgia Tech, Morris was the all-time leader in coaching victories, in any of the school's varsity sports, as he had 12 straight winning seasons, nine straight NCAA regional berths, four straight Atlantic Coast Conference titles (1985-88) and a school-record 51 wins in 1987. In 1985 Morris was asked to be director of marketing and ticket sales by Dr. Homer Rice at Georgia Tech. Morris had put the Yellow Jackets' program on the map in baseball, and in the process raised money for lights and a new stadium. After one year, Morris decided it was impossible to do both and chose to focus his efforts completely on baseball even though he had great love for marketing and fundraising. Major League Guidance Over 150 professional baseball players have played under Morris during their college careers at Miami, Georgia Tech and DeKalb. Among the players Morris coached at Miami that went on to play in the Major Leagues were Ryan Braun (Milwaukee), Pat Burrell (Tampa Bay), Alex Cora (New York Mets), Bobby Hill (San Diego), Aubrey Huff (Detroit), Chris Perez (Cleveland), Cesar Carrillo (San Diego), Brian Barton (St. Louis), Gaby Sanchez (Florida), Charlton Jimerson (Houston), Jay Tessmer (New York Yankees), and Danny Graves (Cincinnati) and Jason Michaels (Houston). Several more Hurricanes during the Morris tenure are right on the cusp of making the show, including Mike Rodriguez (Houston), David Gil (Cincinnati) and Jon Jay (St. Louis). Standout players under Morris from his days at Georgia Tech were Nomar Garciaparra (Los Angeles Dodgers), Jay Payton (Oakland A's) and Jason Varitek (Boston Red Sox). Morris has also enjoyed success on the International scene. From 1989-90, Morris served as head coach of the USA Baseball team that won a Silver Medal in the 1989 Presidential Cup (Taiwan), Bronze Medal at the Goodwill Games and the 1990 International Baseball Association (IBA) World All-Star Game in Atlanta. At the Goodwill Games, his USA squad won two of three games against Cuba, marking the first time in history a senior-level team won a series with Cuba. In 1987, Morris served as pitching coach under Ron Fraser at the Pan American Games (Silver Medal).
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Robert McDaniel
Coach
McDaniel, the team's Director of Baseball Operations & Camps, is in his second stint at Miami. In 2013, McDaniel was promoted to his current position after serving as Director of Baseball Operations since his return to the program in 2001. Following the Hurricanes' second National Championship under Head Coach Jim Morris in 2001, Miami welcomed back a member from its first title under Morris in 1999. McDaniel, better known around the ballpark as "G.M.," returned during the 2001 offseason as the Hurricanes' Coordinator of Baseball Operations, a position he held from fall 1998 through spring 1999. McDaniel is one of the key cogs in the Miami baseball machine. A graduate of Miami's Christopher Columbus High School, G.M. left the Hurricanes following the 1999 National Championship to complete his studies and returned in 2002. He earned his bachelor's of science degree in sports management from Florida International University in the summer of 2003. G.M. boasts a long line of baseball tradition in his lineage as the nephew of former Miami All-American Jorge Maduro and grandson of Cuban baseball legend Bobby Maduro. Along with the Hurricanes in 1999, he has worked in the clubhouses for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays Major League Organization and at Florida State as an undergraduate in 1997-98. With Tampa Bay, G.M. also worked in the minor league clubhouse for the Class A Princeton (W.Va.) Devil Rays. Prior to the time spent in Tallahassee, G.M. served as an intern in 1996 with the Florida Marlins community relations department.
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